In addition to the fine, which is the maximum amount that can be incurred, Google was forced to post a notice to its French homepage that alerted visitors to the ruling and fine for 48 hours following a failed appeal before French courts (Conseil d'Etat) on Friday.

The notice was required to be written in 13-point Arial font and located directly beneath the search bar, with a link to CNIL's decision. The statement read: "Press release: the CNIL has fined Google €150,000 for violating the law on 'information and freedoms.' The decision can be accessed at the following web address: http://www.cnil.fr/linstitution/missions/sanctionner/Google/." The only problem there was that the traffic from the link led CNIL's servers to crash for some of the weekend.

While the company plans to continue to appeal, CNIL's decision was originally made in response to changes made to Google's privacy policy in March 2012, when the company combined its 60 services (including YouTube, Gmail and Google Maps) under a universal privacy policy. Meaning that once logged into any Google account, customers are unable to opt out.

France is not the only one that has a bone to pick where Google is concerned. The company has already faced fines from Spanish and Dutch privacy authorities and Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom are carrying out similar investigations.